Tag: anthropology

  • 24,000-Year-Old Body Is Kin to Both Europeans and American Indians

    24,000-Year-Old Body Is Kin to Both Europeans and American Indians

    Sibirya’da gömülü bulunan 24.000 yıllık çocuğun DNA’sı Avrupalı ve Amerikan yerlilerinin akrabalıkları gibi Antropologlar için sürpriz sonuçlar ortaya çıkardı.

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    A view of Lake Baikal in eastern Siberia near where the young boy buried at Mal’ta was discovered.

    By NICHOLAS WADE

    The genome of a young boy buried at Mal’ta near Lake Baikal in eastern Siberia some 24,000 years ago has turned out to hold two surprises for anthropologists.

    The first is that the boy’s DNA matches that of Western Europeans, showing that during the last Ice Age people from Europe had reached farther east across Eurasia than previously supposed. Though none of the Mal’ta boy’s skin or hair survive, his genes suggest he would have had brown hair, brown eyes and freckled skin.

    The second surprise is that his DNA also matches a large proportion — some 25 percent — of the DNA of living Native Americans. The first people to arrive in the Americas have long been assumed to have descended from Siberian populations related to East Asians. It now seems that they may be a mixture between the Western Europeans who had reached Siberia and an East Asian population.

    The Mal’ta boy was aged 3 to 4 and was buried under a stone slab wearing an ivory diadem, a bead necklace and a bird-shaped pendant. Elsewhere at the same site some 30 Venus figurines were found of the kind produced by the Upper Paleolithic cultures of Europe. The remains were excavated by Russian archaeologists over a 20-year period ending in 1958 and stored in museums in St. Petersburg.

    There they lay for some 50 years until they were examined by a team led by Eske Willerslev of the University of Copenhagen. Dr. Willerslev, an expert in analyzing ancient DNA, was seeking to understand the peopling of the Americas by searching for possible source populations in Siberia. He extracted DNA from bone taken from the child’s upper arm, hoping to find ancestry in the East Asian peoples from whom Native Americans are known to be descended.

    via 24,000-Year-Old Body Is Kin to Both Europeans and American Indians – NYTimes.com.

    more: http://www.nytimes.com/2013/11/21/science/two-surprises-in-dna-of-boy-found-buried-in-siberia.html?smid=fb-nytimes&WT.z_sma=SC_2YO_20131120&_r=0